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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Orme v Lyons [2012] EWHC 3308 (Ch) (12 October 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2012/3308.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 3308 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
7 Rolls Buildings Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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ORME | Claimant/Respondent | |
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LYONS | Defendant/Appellant |
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8th Floor, 165 Fleet Street, London, EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7421 4036 Fax No: 020 7404 1424
Web: www.merrillcorp.com/mls Email: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR R CROZIER (instructed by Parnalls Solicitors) appeared on behalf of the Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
"The amount or regularity of use that must be shown to give rise to a prescriptive claim to the easement is a question of fact. Guidance as to the amount or regularity of use that must be shown can be found in Hollins v. Verney (1884) 13 QBD 304 at 315 in which it was said that the user must be user which is enough at any rate to carry to the mind of a reasonable person who is in possession of the servient tenement the fact that a continuous right to enjoyment is being asserted and ought to be resisted if such right is not recognised and if resistance to it is intended. In White v Taylor (No 2) [1969] 1 Ch 160 at 192-195, Buckley J., dealing with a prescriptive claim to a profit a prendre for grazing said
'User must be shown to have been of such a character, degree and frequency as to indicate an assertion by the claimant of a continuous right and of a right of the measure of the right claimed.'
This statement was approved by the Court of Appeal in Ironside & Crabb v. Cook & Barefoot. If long user of sufficient character, degree and frequency is shown then the burden is on the owner of the servient tenement to prove that he did not in fact know of the user – Diment v Foot [1974] 1 WLR 1427 at 1434, 1435."
"The question then arises whether the use by Mr and Mrs Lyons [i.e. the respondents] was of such a character degree and frequency as to carry to the mind of a reasonable person in possession of the Strip that a continuous right to enjoyment of the Strip was being asserted and ought to be resisted. It is relevant to the consideration of whether the user would have carried to the mind of a reasonable person in possession of the Strip that the Strip has every appearance of being a lane. It is open at both ends. It is of a width typical of country lanes. It is bordered on both sides by hedges or buildings except where the tractor shed stands. It has and had, as the aerial photographs show, wheel tracks or ruts along its length. Given the appearance of the Strip, I consider that the use by Mr and Mrs Lyons with vehicles was sufficient in regularity or amount to indicate an assertion by them of a continuous right to drive over the Strip and to indicate to a reasonable person in possession of the Strip that the assertion should be resisted if he did not wish them to acquire a right."
"a. whether the Adjudicator was right to hold that the user [of the track] from 1989, which he found was occasional, when the metalled road leading from the Farm was temporarily blocked by a vehicle delivering building materials to [the] Farm, was as of right and/or sufficiently continuous in it[s] character to found a prescriptive right ('Ground 1');
b. whether, in such circumstances, the Adjudicator was right to hold that the user from 1989 was of such a character, degree and frequency as to carry to the mind of the servient owner the fact that a continuous right to enjoyment was being asserted and/or to put him on notice that such a right was being asserted ('Ground 2');"
"Mr and Mrs Lyons, in my judgment, drove over the Strip only on odd occasions from April 1989 until the late 1990s. I accept that there were some occasions when the lane to Lowertown Farm was blocked by delivery vehicles and Mr and Mrs Lyons wanted to go out in their car. Having seen the lane into Lowertown Farm, it is obvious to me that if a lorry delivering building materials to Lowertown Farm stopped in the lane, it would block the entrance to and exit from Lowertown Farm. I also accept that on some of the occasions when the lane was blocked, Mr and Mrs Lyons drove down the Strip to go out from Lowertown Farm. However, I do not accept that this occurred as often as twice or even once a week. It is highly unlikely that as often as once or twice a week the lane was blocked by a delivery lorry at the very time that Mr and Mrs Lyons wanted to go out in a car. On some of the occasions when a delivery was being made and Mr or Mrs Lyons wanted to go out, they would have waited until the delivery had been made. On other occasions, they no doubt could have asked the delivery vehicle driver to move his vehicle to allow them to get past. Mr and Mrs Lyons did not have a four wheel drive car. I accept the evidence of Mrs Dawson that she was nervous of driving down the Strip but having seen the Strip myself in winter (the view being on 1st March) I do not accept that it was not possible to drive a car down the Strip. Although I consider that driving down the Strip in an ordinary car was possible, it would have required care and would have taken up time. Mr and Mrs Lyons would have had to balance the extra time and trouble involved in driving down the Strip against the time they would have had to wait for the delivery lorry to leave or be moved. I do accept that building works were going on at Lowertown Farm from April 1989 until the late 1990s and that deliveries of building materials would have been made over the whole of this period. The building works on the farmhouse began in 1989 and on the two storey barn began after May 1992. However, the fact that deliveries were made of building materials would not have required Mr and Mrs Lyons to drive over the Strip as often as once a week over this period. I consider that what Mr Lyons put in his witness statement, namely that he had to use the Strip to exit Lowertown Farm 'sometimes', was more accurate than his statement in cross-examination that he drove over the Strip on 'numerous' times."
"The Deputy Adjudicator was the fact-finding tribunal. Adjudicators to HM Land Registry and the Deputies have relevant expertise. Although they might sometimes get things wrong, they are usually more experienced and expert at deciding this kind of question than appellate courts are. A measure of weighed deference should be accorded to the findings and conclusions in their reasoned decisions."